EP3704536B1 - Composant de guide d'onde - Google Patents

Composant de guide d'onde Download PDF

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Publication number
EP3704536B1
EP3704536B1 EP18799433.0A EP18799433A EP3704536B1 EP 3704536 B1 EP3704536 B1 EP 3704536B1 EP 18799433 A EP18799433 A EP 18799433A EP 3704536 B1 EP3704536 B1 EP 3704536B1
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Prior art keywords
waveguide
optical
partially
electro
waveguide core
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German (de)
English (en)
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EP3704536A1 (fr
Inventor
Wolfgang Freude
Christian Koos
Matthias Lauermann
Sandeep Ummethala
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Karlsruher Institut fuer Technologie KIT
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Karlsruher Institut fuer Technologie KIT
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02FOPTICAL DEVICES OR ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE CONTROL OF LIGHT BY MODIFICATION OF THE OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF THE MEDIA OF THE ELEMENTS INVOLVED THEREIN; NON-LINEAR OPTICS; FREQUENCY-CHANGING OF LIGHT; OPTICAL LOGIC ELEMENTS; OPTICAL ANALOGUE/DIGITAL CONVERTERS
    • G02F1/00Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics
    • G02F1/01Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics for the control of the intensity, phase, polarisation or colour 
    • G02F1/061Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics for the control of the intensity, phase, polarisation or colour  based on electro-optical organic material
    • G02F1/065Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics for the control of the intensity, phase, polarisation or colour  based on electro-optical organic material in an optical waveguide structure
    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02BOPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
    • G02B6/00Light guides; Structural details of arrangements comprising light guides and other optical elements, e.g. couplings
    • G02B6/10Light guides; Structural details of arrangements comprising light guides and other optical elements, e.g. couplings of the optical waveguide type
    • G02B6/12Light guides; Structural details of arrangements comprising light guides and other optical elements, e.g. couplings of the optical waveguide type of the integrated circuit kind
    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02FOPTICAL DEVICES OR ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE CONTROL OF LIGHT BY MODIFICATION OF THE OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF THE MEDIA OF THE ELEMENTS INVOLVED THEREIN; NON-LINEAR OPTICS; FREQUENCY-CHANGING OF LIGHT; OPTICAL LOGIC ELEMENTS; OPTICAL ANALOGUE/DIGITAL CONVERTERS
    • G02F1/00Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics
    • G02F1/01Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics for the control of the intensity, phase, polarisation or colour 
    • G02F1/21Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics for the control of the intensity, phase, polarisation or colour  by interference
    • G02F1/225Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics for the control of the intensity, phase, polarisation or colour  by interference in an optical waveguide structure
    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02FOPTICAL DEVICES OR ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE CONTROL OF LIGHT BY MODIFICATION OF THE OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF THE MEDIA OF THE ELEMENTS INVOLVED THEREIN; NON-LINEAR OPTICS; FREQUENCY-CHANGING OF LIGHT; OPTICAL LOGIC ELEMENTS; OPTICAL ANALOGUE/DIGITAL CONVERTERS
    • G02F1/00Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics
    • G02F1/29Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics for the control of the position or the direction of light beams, i.e. deflection
    • G02F1/31Digital deflection, i.e. optical switching
    • G02F1/313Digital deflection, i.e. optical switching in an optical waveguide structure
    • G02F1/3136Digital deflection, i.e. optical switching in an optical waveguide structure of interferometric switch type
    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02BOPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
    • G02B6/00Light guides; Structural details of arrangements comprising light guides and other optical elements, e.g. couplings
    • G02B6/10Light guides; Structural details of arrangements comprising light guides and other optical elements, e.g. couplings of the optical waveguide type
    • G02B6/12Light guides; Structural details of arrangements comprising light guides and other optical elements, e.g. couplings of the optical waveguide type of the integrated circuit kind
    • G02B2006/12133Functions
    • G02B2006/12142Modulator
    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02FOPTICAL DEVICES OR ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE CONTROL OF LIGHT BY MODIFICATION OF THE OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF THE MEDIA OF THE ELEMENTS INVOLVED THEREIN; NON-LINEAR OPTICS; FREQUENCY-CHANGING OF LIGHT; OPTICAL LOGIC ELEMENTS; OPTICAL ANALOGUE/DIGITAL CONVERTERS
    • G02F2201/00Constructional arrangements not provided for in groups G02F1/00 - G02F7/00
    • G02F2201/50Protective arrangements
    • G02F2201/501Blocking layers, e.g. against migration of ions

Definitions

  • the invention relates to a device for guiding light, in particular a waveguide component in the field of integrated optics, in particular waveguide-based electro-optical modulators.
  • an electro-optical material is understood to mean a material that changes its optical properties when interacting with an electric field.
  • Integrated optical circuits are increasingly being implemented on semiconductor substrates such as so-called silicon-on-insulator substrates (SOI), which makes it possible to combine a wide variety of functions on one chip.
  • modulators with which electrical modulation signals or voltages can be impressed on a light wave (an “optical carrier”).
  • modulation signal is to be understood here as meaning at least a voltage or current signal.
  • waveguide means an optical waveguide. Such a waveguide is at least partially transparent or translucent to light and set up in such a way that light can at least partially be guided through such a waveguide or light can be guided through such a waveguide.
  • the term "transparent” is to be understood herein as a material property of the disclosed waveguide and its embodiments, which allows light to travel along the length of the waveguide component with an attenuation of preferably less than 30 dB, more preferably less than 20 dB, and entirely more preferably less than 10 dB to pass through.
  • the term “light” includes at least a portion of the electromagnetic To understand radiation or the electromagnetic spectrum.
  • the term “light” is to be understood herein as meaning electromagnetic waves with vacuum wavelengths of approximately 10 nm to approximately 1 mm and in particular between approximately 30 nm and approximately 300 ⁇ m (or frequencies between 1 THz and 10 PHz).
  • the term "light” should be understood to mean at least the following areas of the electromagnetic spectrum, including at least the following areas: the ultraviolet range (including vacuum wavelengths in a range from approximately 10 nm to approximately 380 nm or frequencies in a range from about 790 THz to about 10 PHz), the visible range (including vacuum wavelengths in a range from about 380 nm to about 780 nm or frequencies in a range from about 380 THz to about 790 THz) and the infrared range (including vacuum wavelengths in a range from about 790 nm to about 1 mm or frequencies in a range from about 1 THz to about 380 THz).
  • light is to be understood herein exclusively as the light that can be guided through the waveguide component within the waveguide component.
  • modulators could be used, for example, in the telecommunications industry, measurement technology or generally in integrated photonics.
  • light modulators can also be realized with electro-optical materials that react to an externally applied electrical field with a quasi-instantaneous change in the optical properties such as the refractive index or attenuation.
  • electro-optical materials include, among others, those with second-order optical nonlinearity, which exhibit the so-called Pockels effect.
  • the refractive index and thus the phase of an optical carrier can be changed proportionally to a (quasi-)static electrical modulation field via the Pockels effect.
  • Silicon is the material of choice for inexpensive integrated optical components. Due to its centro-symmetric crystal structure, however, silicon does not exhibit any second-order nonlinearity.
  • One way of realizing Pockels effect modulators in material systems without second-order nonlinearity is hybrid integration with an electro-optical material, e.g. with organic or polymer-based substances.
  • the light wave is guided in an optical waveguide such that it interacts with the electro-optic material such that the propagation properties of the optical signal are significantly influenced by the real and/or imaginary part of the complex refractive index in the electro-optic material.
  • the complex refractive index of the electro-optical material can be changed by an externally applied voltage or an externally impressed current.
  • the amplitude and/or the phase of the optical output signal can be set via this external current or voltage signal, possibly in combination with an interferometric structure.
  • the waveguide must be designed in such a way that the light wave propagates at least partially in the electro-optical material. If in the same area of space also the electric field, which is caused by the applied electrical voltage is generated, a quasi-instantaneous change in the optical properties such as the refractive index and thus a change in the material speed of the light wave can be realized by a second-order non-linearity in the electro-optical material. Efficient modulation is achieved in that, for a given carrier power and given modulation voltage, the highest possible electric field strengths are generated by selecting a small waveguide cross section consisting at least partially of electro-optical material.
  • Document [2] discloses an electro-optical component which has an electro-optically active waveguide core and a cladding material made up of two layers.
  • the first layer of cladding material which is directly adjacent to the waveguide core, has a lower electrical refractive index and a smaller thickness than the second layer of cladding material, which lies between the first layer and the electrode layers.
  • the structure described by [2] differs in several respects from the structure on which our invention is based, and is consequently not able to fulfill the object on which our invention is based:
  • the structure described by [2] is electro-optical Activity only in the waveguide core of the waveguide, but not in the cladding.
  • the aim of the structure claimed by Suzuki is therefore to maximize the electric field generated in the waveguide core by an externally applied voltage and accordingly to minimize it outside the core.
  • the solution according to [2] differs fundamentally from the solution claimed herein according to at least one of claims 1 to 26 in that the field is maximized in a specific area outside the core and correspondingly minimized in the waveguide core.
  • the structure disclosed in [2] is based on a layered arrangement of structures, in which the electro-optically active layer serves as a basis for a further deposition of cladding and electrode layers with high electrical or optical quality.
  • Documents [7] and [8] describe an electro-optical modulator in which optimized high-frequency properties are achieved through the use of materials with a high electrical refractive index will.
  • multilayer electrode structures are described, the layer lying closest to the waveguide core consisting of a semiconductor with low doping. Outside the area of influence of the optical field, these semiconductor layers are electrically conductively connected to the metal supply lines. The resulting lead resistance within the semiconductor layers generally leads to low-pass behavior. This is overcome by an additional capacitive coupling between the metallic supply lines and the conductive semiconductor layers.
  • the metal supply lines are expanded over a large area up to the area of the optical waveguide and are capacitively coupled to the conductive semiconductor layers via a dielectric layer with a high electrical refractive index.
  • the high electrical refractive index results in a high-capacity capacitor, which acts as a short circuit at high frequencies and counteracts a drop in the frequency response of the electrode structures.
  • the structure described in [7] and [8] has a number of disadvantages compared to the structure claimed here.
  • conductive areas near the optical waveguide are absolutely necessary, since the waveguide core contains so-called multi-quantum wells, in which the optical refractive index can only be changed by injecting or depleting free charge carriers.
  • the structure is based on a complex vertical layer structure in which the electro-optically effective structure consists of a monocrystalline semiconductor that is as defect-free as possible, which is used as the basis for the further growth of usually crystalline semiconductor layers is used.
  • multi-quantum wells are used, which have to be grown as monocrystalline semiconductor films with very precisely defined layer thicknesses using complex semiconductor epitaxial processes. It is therefore not possible to use highly efficient electro-optical polymers.
  • the structure disclosed in [7] and [8] obligatorily requires the removal of the substrate, which extremely complicates the manufacture.
  • the structure is based on indium phosphide technology (abbr.: InP technology), which is expensive and complex compared to silicon technology.
  • the present invention makes it possible to use a large variety of electro-optical materials which do not have to be subject to any special requirements with regard to processability. This makes it possible to use a material whose optical properties can already be varied by an applied electric field, so that charge carrier transport is not necessary. In order to achieve high component efficiency, a field increase at the interface of a dielectric material with a high electrical refractive index is used in a targeted manner, see the solution section below.
  • the concept claimed here also enables component structures in which first a lateral structuring of optical waveguides, electrically conductive conductor tracks and intermediate dielectric areas is carried out, on which the electro-optically active material is applied after the structuring with comparatively low requirements regarding layer thickness, layer quality and lateral dimensions can be deposited. Further, contrary to the Dagli et al. without removing the substrate. Common production lines for silicon-based microelectronics or silicon photonics can be used for production.
  • Document [9] discloses an electro-optical component which has an electro-optically active material in the cladding region of the optical waveguide.
  • the patent breaks away from structures that use electro-optically active materials in the waveguide core and seeks to overcome the attendant limitations in material selection.
  • the claims relate to the design of the optical waveguide, which consists of an inorganic waveguide core and two electro-optically active organic layers enclosing the waveguide core.
  • This structure differs from the arrangement described in our invention disclosure in several respects: On the one hand, to produce the structure described by [9], it is necessary to use the electro-optically active layer as a basis for a further deposition of electrode layers. This severely limits the choice of materials.
  • the configuration described by [9] does not allow lateral structuring of optical waveguides, electrically conductive conductor tracks and dielectric areas in between, and only then in a subsequent deposition step the electro-optically active material with comparatively low requirements with regard to layer thickness, apply layer quality and lateral dimensions.
  • Processing with commercially available, easily controllable and highly scalable silicon photonic manufacturing processes is just as impossible on the basis of the document [9] as is monolithic co-integration with other silicon components.
  • the possibility underlying the present invention of increasing the modulation field strength generated by an external voltage in the electro-optically active cladding region by using a first and second cladding region with different electrical refractive indices is also not discussed.
  • Document [10] describes an electro-optical modulator which has an optical waveguide consisting of an electro-optically active waveguide core and two cladding regions consists.
  • the first cladding layer has a low optical refractive index and a low electrical refractive index
  • the second cladding region has a moderate optical refractive index and a high electrical refractive index.
  • This structure is very similar to [2].
  • the high electrical refractive index cladding material is used to increase the electric field of an applied voltage in the waveguide core, while in our invention the field is increased in the cladding region and minimized in the waveguide core.
  • the choice of the electro-optically active materials according to [10] is considerably restricted: since the electro-optical material forms the waveguide core, it should preferably have a high optical refractive index but a low electrical refractive index.
  • a modulator is described which is based on a vertically layered structure. According to [10], organic materials are used for this purpose, which have to be applied to one another in a complex process with high optical quality. Simpler lateral structuring in the manufacture of the modulator, as required in the task of our invention disclosure, is not possible here.
  • the interaction area of the light guided in the waveguide is considered to be that area in which the intensity is less than a factor of 1000 weaker than the highest intensity value occurring in the waveguide cross section.
  • the underlying structure should also be able to be produced in large numbers with the simplest possible manufacturing process, ideally using highly scalable manufacturing processes from silicon-based microelectronics (e.g.
  • CMOS Complementary Metal-Oxide Semiconductors
  • advantages include, for example, the use of an electro-optical material in the waveguide cladding instead of in the waveguide core. In this way, it becomes possible, for example, to use easily structurable semiconductor materials with a high refractive index (such as silicon) for the waveguide core, even if they have no electro-optical activity.
  • the high refractive index waveguide core material enables a strong concentration of the light and thus small component dimensions can then be combined with a large variety of electro-optical cladding materials, whereby the interaction of the light guided in the waveguide can be achieved by a special design of the waveguide core, e.g. in the form of a slotted waveguide.
  • Arrangements in which the electro-optically active material does not have to serve as a basis for a further deposition of layers with high electrical or optical quality and possibly a crystalline crystal structure are particularly advantageous in this context. With such arrangements, it is possible in particular to use organic electro-optical materials as the active material, which have extremely high electro-optical coefficients but are only suitable to a limited extent or not at all as a basis for further inorganic layers.
  • Such configurations can be achieved, for example, by a lateral structuring of optical waveguides, electrically conductive conductor tracks and intermediate dielectric areas, to which the electro-optically active material after the end of the structuring with comparatively low requirements regarding layer thickness, layer quality and lateral dimensions can be deposited.
  • silicon photonics microelectronics
  • III-V semiconductors such as indium phosphide
  • the modulator structures can be combined as seamlessly as possible in a monolithic integration approach with other components from the meanwhile very extensive portfolio of Si photonics. It is also desirable to completely dispense with complex production processes that contain, for example, the removal of the semiconductor substrate.
  • the advantage of the invention is that it solves the conflict of objectives between high modulation bandwidth, high efficiency and the associated low operating voltage, and low optical losses. This is mainly achieved by inserting a dielectric material between the electrically conductive line regions and the electro-optically active waveguide.
  • the dielectric material has a high electrical refractive index in the range of modulation frequencies, which are typically 1-100 GHz, but a low optical refractive index in the range of optical frequencies, which are typically in the range of 200 THz lie.
  • the modulation field is amplified by the ideally transparent dielectric material without impairing the light guidance.
  • Silicon-based photonic circuits enable very small, highly integrated transmitter modules required in optical communications. Particularly low-power and extremely fast modulators as disclosed herein could open up a new market. Previous conventional silicon modulators only allow data rates up to approx. 50 Gbit/s and require driver voltages of several volts.
  • the present solution or one of the embodiments at least according to one of claims 1 to 26 with capacitively coupled silicon-organic hybrid (SOH) modulators enables the driver voltage to be reduced by up to a factor of 10, simplified processing and an increase in the modulation bandwidth and thus the possible data rate.
  • SOH silicon-organic hybrid
  • the next generation of optical data connections requires higher bandwidth with lower energy consumption than is currently possible. These can be used, for example, to cover the need for optical interconnects in data centers and for high-performance computers, but also in optical metro networks.
  • the terms “comprise”, “comprise” or “include” or any grammatical deviations thereof are used in a non-exclusive manner. Accordingly, these terms can refer both to situations in which, apart from the features introduced by these terms, no further features are present, or to situations in which one or more further features are present.
  • the expression “A has B”, “A comprises B”, or “A includes B” can both refer to the situation in which there is no other element in A apart from B (ie to a situation , in which A consists exclusively of B), as well as the situation in which, in addition to B, there are one or more other elements in A, e.g. element C, elements C and D or even other elements.
  • the refractive index also the refractive index or optical density, is an optical material property. This dimensionless physical quantity indicates by which factor the wavelength and the Phase velocity of light are smaller than in vacuum.
  • the terms "refractive index”, “refractive index” and “optical density” are used synonymously.
  • the terms “conduct” and “guide” are also used synonymously here, ie in relation to a waveguide device according to the invention which is set up in such a way that light can be guided or guided through such a waveguide device.
  • the "optical refractive index” is used below for the refractive index in the frequency range of the light wave and the “electrical refractive index” for the refractive index in the frequency range of the electrical modulation signal.
  • optical density As a measure of extinction.
  • the term "index of refraction” comes from the term refraction and its appearance in Snell's law of refraction.
  • a first embodiment (cf. Figure 1-1 , Subfigure 1A and the corresponding detailed description below) comprises a one-piece waveguide core formed by means of at least one strip waveguide with a high optical refractive index.
  • the optical refractive index of the core at the operating wavelength is preferably greater than 1.8, more preferably greater than 2.5, and most preferably greater than 3.0.
  • the waveguide core itself need not exhibit any electro-optical activity; accordingly come for its production a large variety of materials into consideration such as semiconductors such as silicon or compound semiconductors, dielectrics such as metal oxides or nitrides with a high refractive index, or organic materials that have a correspondingly high refractive index.
  • the waveguide core is surrounded at least in regions or partially in the interaction region of the light guided in the waveguide by a first cladding region, which consists at least partially of an electro-optically active material.
  • a second cladding area is arranged in the area of the waveguide core between the electro-optical material of the first cladding area and the electrically conductive line areas.
  • the second cladding area consists of a dielectric material that does not necessarily have to have electro-optical properties.
  • the electrical refractive index of the second cladding region is preferably greater than 4.5, more preferably greater than 8, and most preferably greater than 12, while the electrical refractive index of the first cladding region is preferably less than 4.5, more preferably less than 3.5, and most preferably less than 2.9.
  • the ratio between the electrical refractive indices of the first and second cladding regions is preferably greater than 2, more preferably greater than 3, and most preferably greater than 4.
  • the electrical refractive index of the waveguide core should be chosen as large as possible.
  • the optical refractive index of the waveguide core material is preferably above 2.1, more preferably above 2.8, and most preferably above 3.3.
  • the optical refractive indices must be selected in such a way that the first cladding region has a lower optical refractive index than the waveguide core.
  • the optical refractive index of the second cladding region can be selected to be smaller than the optical refractive index of the core, but does not have to be - in the latter case, the thickness of the first cladding region must be selected so large that optical power is reliably prevented from being radiated into the second cladding region.
  • E n , 1 E n , 2 n electrical , 2 2 n electrical , 1 2
  • the modulation field strength E n in the electro-optically active first cladding region is significantly greater than the field strength E n in the second cladding region.
  • Subfigure 1B shows the course of the electrical refractive index and the course of the electrical modulation field in the center of the waveguide cross section. A modulation voltage applied across the electrically conductive line regions drops substantially across the first cladding region if the waveguide geometry and the electrical refractive indices of the cladding and waveguide core materials are chosen appropriately.
  • the material of the waveguide core preferably has an electrical refractive index greater than or equal to the electrical refractive index of the first cladding region.
  • the electrical modulation field is therefore concentrated on the first cladding region with a low electrical refractive index for the first embodiment, which leads to an increased interaction of the modulation field with the light wave in the nonlinear electro-optical cladding material if, according to the invention, a dielectric cladding material is used in the second cladding region , whose electrical refractive index is above that of the electro-optical material in the first cladding region.
  • materials with a high electrical refractive index in the frequency range of up to a few hundred gigahertz are oxides, in particular oxides of transition metals (e.g.
  • the waveguide core consists of two parts which are separated from one another by a slot (optical slot waveguide).
  • the slit is filled with the electro-optical material belonging to the first cladding region, the optical refractive index of which is lower than that of the two-part core (slit waveguide).
  • the difference in the optical refractive indices of the core and the first cladding region is preferably greater than or equal to 0.5, particularly preferably greater than or equal to 1, and very particularly preferably greater than or equal to 1.5.
  • the normal component of the electric field strength E n of the optical field becomes particularly large if a dominantly polarized optical field perpendicular to the interface, ie, in the present case vertically polarized, is preferably selected.
  • the field interaction factor ⁇ describes the fraction of the optical field which interacts with the modulation field in the electro-optical cladding material, assuming that the corresponding tensor element of the nonlinear susceptibility is not equal to zero.
  • E x is the x-component of the optical field
  • P is the power of the optical field
  • n opt is the refractive index of the electro-optical material
  • Z 0 is the characteristic impedance in a vacuum
  • A is the cross-sectional area in which the optical field meets the modulation field in the electro- optical material interacts.
  • the electrical modulation field in the first cladding region directly surrounding the two-part waveguide core can be increased according to the invention by placing a second cladding region made of dielectric material with a high electrical refractive index in the region of the waveguide core between the electrically conductive line regions and the electro-optical material of the first cladding region is arranged.
  • the combination of optical and electrical field enhancement leads to a particularly strong interaction of the electrical and optical fields in the electro-optical material in the slot.
  • FIG. 1D Another embodiment (cf. Figures 1-2 , Subfigure 1D and the corresponding detailed description below) of the structure according to the invention connects, for example, the dielectric material with a high electrical refractive index of the second cladding region directly to the two-part waveguide core of an optical slot waveguide.
  • the optical and electrical field increase at the interfaces between areas with a high and low refractive index leads to a strong interaction of the fields with the electro-optical material belonging to the first cladding region in the slot.
  • optically transparent line regions connect the individual parts of a multi-part waveguide core with electrically conductive line regions.
  • the electro-optical material of the first cladding region fills the slot between the parts of the waveguide core.
  • the second cladding region made of dielectric material with a high electrical refractive index is arranged between the electrically conductive line regions and the first cladding region.
  • the second cladding region can also connect directly to the waveguide core. With moderate conductivity of the transparent line areas, this structure achieves a high field strength for low frequencies of the electrical modulation field in the slot (low-pass characteristic).
  • these transparent line areas can also be used with low conductivity if a poling process of the electro-optical material is required during fabrication.
  • the poling of electro-optical materials is the alignment of molecules or domains of an electro-optical material such that a macroscopic electro-optical effect is formed in the poled volume of material.
  • the molecules of which have a dipole moment for example, this can be achieved, among other things, by generating a strong electric field via a DC voltage, the field lines of which align the molecules.
  • a DC voltage can be applied via the transparent line areas during the poling process, so that a strong electric field is formed in the slot and thus enables poling.
  • the waveguide core is slightly conductive, which can be achieved, for example, in silicon by light doping.
  • a part of the waveguide core is electrically connected to a dedicated poling electrode, see Figure 3-1 , Subfigure 3B and their description below.
  • a DC voltage can now be applied during fabrication via these polarizing electrodes and the low-conductive parts of the waveguide core, so that the electro-optical material in the slot can be polarized.
  • a transparent conducting region connects part of the waveguide core to an electrically conductive conducting region.
  • the first cladding region consists of electro-optical material. Dielectric material with a high electrical refractive index is placed in the second cladding region between the electro-optical material and the electrically conductive line regions so that the modulation electric field in the electro-optical material of the first cladding region is increased for a given applied modulation voltage.
  • the effect here is equivalent to the structure shown in Subfigure 1E.
  • the waveguide core in addition to the design of the waveguide core as a strip or slot waveguide, it can also be formed by periodic or non-periodic structures with structural details that are significantly smaller than the optical wavelength, for example with a waveguide core that consists of blocks of materials with a high refractive index that are unconnected along the direction of propagation of the light (so-called “sub-wavelength grating waveguides"). These structures can be designed both as strip waveguides and as slotted waveguides and enable stronger interaction of the optical wave with the electro-optical cladding material. Furthermore, the waveguide core or surrounding areas can be structured along the propagation direction in such a way that the propagation properties of the optical mode are advantageously influenced.
  • slow-light structures that reduce the group speed of the guided light and thus increase the interaction time of the optical field with the electro-optical material. This leads to a high electro-optical interaction over a short distance.
  • Slow-light structures can be realized, for example, using photonic crystals. Structures can also be implemented that adapt the group velocity of the optical field to that of the electrical modulation wave.
  • the waveguide core or its components, the second cladding region made of dielectric material with a high electrical refractive index, the transparent line regions, and the electrically conductive line regions can first be deposited next to one another on the substrate using conventional lateral structuring methods before the first cladding region is at least partially Electro-optical material and, if necessary, further top layers are applied. In particular, with these arrangements it is not necessary to deposit further layers with high electrical or optical quality and possibly a crystalline crystal structure on the electro-optical material of the first cladding region. This drastically simplifies production and at the same time expands the range of electro-optical materials that can be used. This makes it possible, in particular, to introduce, for example, organic materials of the first cladding region from the liquid phase into the prestructured component. With these structures, it is not necessary to remove the substrate.
  • a waveguide component has: a waveguide which is at least partially transparent or translucent to light and is set up in such a way that light can be guided at least partially through the waveguide or can be guided through it, comprising: a Waveguide core, wherein the waveguide core is formed from one element or from a plurality of spatially separated elements which have or are formed from at least one waveguide core material; a first cladding region which has at least one electro-optical material or is formed from it, wherein the first cladding region at least partially interacts with light guided in the waveguide, and wherein the first cladding region is at least partially disposed around the one or more elements of the waveguide core; and a second cladding region comprising or formed from at least one dielectric material, the second cladding region being at least partially arranged around the first cladding region and/or the waveguide core; at least two line regions which are at least partially electrically conductive, an electrical modulation signal being applied between the line regions, the line regions being arranged at least partially along
  • the feature: "and wherein the first cladding region is at least partially arranged around the one or more elements of the waveguide core” is understood herein to mean that the first cladding region is arranged around the one or more elements of the waveguide core is arranged such that the jacket region and the element or elements are at least partially in direct or indirect contact with one another. In other words, this means that either the first cladding region and the element or elements of the waveguide core are at least partially directly adjacent to one another or that additional elements or materials can be arranged at least partially between the first cladding region and the element or elements of the waveguide core .
  • the electrical refractive index of the dielectric material in the second cladding region at a frequency of the modulation signal of 10 GHz is more than a factor of 1.8 above the electrical refractive index of the electro-optical material in the first cladding region.
  • the difference in the electrical refractive index leads to an increase in the field and the electrical field of the modulation signal is concentrated on the first cladding region with a low electrical refractive index, which leads to an increased interaction of the modulation field with the light wave in the nonlinear electro-optical cladding material and thus to an increased efficiency of the component.
  • the dielectric material of the second cladding region has an electrical refractive index of at least 3.5, 4.5, 8, 10, 15, 20 or 25 in a frequency range of a modulation signal between 5 GHz and 40 GHz or in particular with a relative permittivity ⁇ r in a range from approximately 80 to approximately 250.
  • the electrical refractive index of the waveguide core is higher than the electrical refractive index of the first cladding region. This leads to a field increase in the modulation field not only at the interface between the first and second cladding area, but also at the interface between the first cladding area and the waveguide core. As a result, a further increase in the field strength in the electro-optical material of the first cladding region is achieved, which increases the efficiency of the component.
  • the electrical refractive index of the waveguide core is at least 3. Since the electrical refractive index of electro-optical materials is often less than 3, it is desirable to use a waveguide core whose electrical Refractive index is at least 3 or greater in order to use a stronger field enhancement of the modulation field in the first cladding region.
  • the electrical refractive index of the electro-optical material in the first cladding region (130) is at most 9.
  • a larger number of materials can be used for the second cladding region, which meet the condition that the electrical refractive index is greater than in the first cladding region.
  • the waveguide component has a lateral structuring in which the waveguide core, the line regions and at least the dielectric material of the second cladding region are initially formed in a planar arrangement, to which electro-optically active material is then applied.
  • the waveguide core, the first cladding region, the second cladding region and the line regions are arranged at least partially next to one another on a common substrate.
  • This arrangement significantly simplifies fabrication, since existing industrial technologies and manufacturing processes such as the "Silicon-on-Insulator" platform can be used. Furthermore, it is not thereby necessary to deposit further layers with high electrical or optical quality on the electro-optical material of the first cladding region, which further simplifies production.
  • the waveguide core has at least partially electro-optical properties (abbreviation: EO properties).
  • EO properties electro-optical properties
  • a waveguide core that is at least partially electro-optically active increases the efficiency of the modulator in that the electrical modulation signal and the light wave can interact with one another in an electro-optically active material not only in the first cladding region, but also in the waveguide core.
  • the waveguide core is formed as a slotted waveguide.
  • the design of the core as a slot waveguide leads to an increase in the electric field of the light wave in the first cladding area, inside the slot. Since the electrical field of the modulation signal is also increased in the first cladding region, this arrangement leads to a further increase in the modulation efficiency.
  • the difference between the optical refractive index of the waveguide core material of the slotted waveguide and the optical refractive index of the first cladding material is more than 0.5 or more than 1.0 or more than 1.5.
  • the greater the difference between the high-index waveguide core material of the slotted waveguide and the first cladding material with the lower optical refractive index the greater the field increase of the electric field of the light wave in the electro-optically active first cladding region. As a result, particularly efficient components can be realized.
  • the second casing area is at least partially directly adjacent to the electrically conductive line areas.
  • the second cladding area is at least partially in direct contact with the electrical areas. Due to the fact that the second cladding area, which has a high electrical refractive index, directly adjoins the line area, it is avoided that part of the electrical modulation signal fills the area between the line area and the second cladding area, which is not filled by the field of the light wave and therefore cannot contribute to the modulation. This avoids a reduction in the modulation efficiency.
  • the second cladding region is at least partially directly adjacent to the first cladding region.
  • the second cladding region is at least partially in direct contact with the first cladding region. Since the first cladding region is at least partially electro-optically active, it is desirable that the electric field of the modulation signal is mainly concentrated in this region. By avoiding a further area between the first and second cladding area, the field increase due to the difference in the electrical refractive index can be optimally utilized.
  • the second cladding region is at least partially directly adjacent to the waveguide core.
  • the second cladding region is in direct contact with the waveguide core or its elements.
  • the electric field strength of the modulation signal within the slot can thereby be maximized.
  • the field strength of the light wave is typically also greatest in the slit, which is filled by the electro-optically active material of the first cladding region. The concentration of the field of the light wave and that of the modulation signal in the slit lead to a high level of interaction in the electro-optically active material and thus to a high efficiency of the component.
  • the waveguide core is at least partially electrically conductively connected to the line area via a further, moderately conductive and transparent line area.
  • a high field strength can be achieved for low frequencies of the electric modulation field in the slot.
  • An optimal frequency response can be achieved in conjunction with the field increase of the electrical field due to the material with a high electrical refractive index in the second cladding area.
  • these transparent line areas can also be used with low conductivity if a poling process of the electro-optical material is required during fabrication.
  • the waveguide component additionally has at least one electrically conductive line area or contact which is at least partially electrically conductively connected to the waveguide core.
  • This embodiment can be used to apply a DC voltage to the waveguide core, which may be of low conductivity, if a poling process of the electro-optical material is required during fabrication.
  • the concentration of free charge carriers, at least in the waveguide core is less than 10 19 cm -3 or less than 10 18 cm -3 or less than 10 17 cm -3 . Free charge carriers lead to optical losses in the waveguide. The lower the charge carrier concentration selected, the lower the losses in the waveguide and thus in the entire component.
  • the dielectric material in the second cladding region is transparent or translucent with respect to light and set up in such a way that light can be conducted at least partially through the second cladding region or can be guided through it.
  • Transparent materials as the second cladding area allow this to be brought close to the waveguide core without increasing the optical losses in the waveguide. The closer the second cladding area can be brought to the waveguide, the stronger the modulation field in the immediate vicinity of the waveguide core and the higher the efficiency of the component.
  • the dielectric material of the second cladding region at least partially comprises or is formed from an organic material.
  • Organic materials can greatly simplify fabrication, since they can be deposited from the liquid phase, for example, and no complicated layers have to be grown. Furthermore, organic materials can often be optimally adapted to their intended use through appropriate molecular design. In particular, it is possible to optimize organic materials with regard to the highest possible electro-optical coefficient r 33 .
  • the second cladding region has or is formed from at least one material from the group of dielectric materials, the group of dielectric materials including, for example, the following compounds: Al 2 O 3 , ZrO 2 , ZrSiO 4 , HfO 2 , HfSiO 4 , Pr 2 O 3 , Gd 2 O 3 , Y 2 O 3 , La 2 O 3 , Ta 2 O 5 , TiO 2 , BaTiO 3 , SrTiO 3 , or BaSrTiO 3 or combinations thereof.
  • These materials or material classes typically have a high electrical refractive index. This ensures that there is a large difference in the electrical refractive index between the second and first cladding material, which enables the field increase in the electro-optically active material.
  • the waveguide at least partially includes or is formed from silicon.
  • Silicon has advantageous properties as a waveguide core. It is transparent to light in the infrared range, which keeps optical losses low, and it has a high optical refractive index and a relatively high electrical refractive index. The high refractive index leads to an increase in the field of the light wave and the modulation signal in the electro-optically active first cladding region and thus to a high efficiency of the component.
  • silicon simplifies fabrication. The structuring of silicon, in particular on planar substrates, is easily possible with standardized industrial processes, for example from the field of CMOS-based microelectronics.
  • the waveguide component has at least one substrate which at least partially has SiO 2 or is formed from it.
  • SiO 2 as the substrate material is transparent, which reduces the optical losses in the waveguide. Furthermore, it allows simple manufacture, in particular for a planar arrangement.
  • SiO 2 is an important component of so-called silicon-on-insulator (abbreviation: SOI) wafers, which have established themselves as an important substrate for integrated optical circuits. Existing industrial manufacturing processes are already available here.
  • the electro-optical material of the first cladding region at least partially has or is formed from an organic material.
  • Organic electro-optical materials often achieve a very high second-order nonlinearity, which enables high device efficiency. Furthermore, organic materials allow simple processing, for example deposition from the liquid phase, which further simplifies production.
  • the electro-optical material of the first cladding region at least partially has or is formed from a ferroelectric material.
  • Ferroelectric materials often have a high second-order nonlinearity, which can be used in this structure for an efficient device.
  • the waveguide core has elements with a maximum dimension below the material wavelength or below half the material wavelength of the waveguide core material.
  • the nanostructuring of the waveguide core for example in the form of what is known as a sub-wavelength grating waveguide, enables stronger interaction between the optical wave and the electro-optical cladding material.
  • the group velocity of the light wave can be influenced by an appropriate design of the structures and, for example be adapted to the propagation speed of the modulation signal, which in turn increases the efficiency of the component (so-called traveling wave arrangement).
  • the waveguide is at least partially formed by means of photonic crystals or has such photonic crystals. These can, for example, reduce the group velocity of the guided light and thus increase the interaction time of the optical field with the electro-optical material. This leads to a high electro-optical interaction over a short distance and thus to higher efficiency with smaller dimensions.
  • the use of a dielectric material with a high electrical refractive index leads to an increase in the electrical modulation field in the region of the waveguide and thus to a stronger interaction of the modulation field with the optical carrier in the electro-optical material. This allows efficient and fast components to be implemented without additional optical losses due to conductive areas near the optical waveguide.
  • the general concept of a waveguide-based electro-optical device is described above. It can very well be realized on a waveguide platform with high optical index contrast.
  • the optical refractive index of the waveguide core is preferably greater than 1.8 to enable high integration density and that of the waveguide cladding is between 1 and 3, with the index difference between the waveguide core and the cladding being preferably greater than 0.5, particularly preferably greater than 1.
  • the refractive index of the core is particularly preferably greater than 3 and the refractive index of the cladding is between 1.3 and 2.
  • the cross section of the waveguide core is preferably less than 5 ⁇ m 2 , particularly preferably less than 1 ⁇ m 2 .
  • An electro-optical material is a material that changes its optical properties when interacting with an electrical field changes. In the realization of waveguide-based modulators, the electro-optical material preferably has a Pockels effect with non-linear coefficients of r 33 >30 pm/V, particularly preferably of r 33 >80 pm/V.
  • the optical refractive index of the electro-optical material is preferably less than 2.4; the electrical refractive index in the frequency range of the electrical modulation signal is preferably less than 10.
  • electro-optical materials that meet the above properties are organic materials such as SEO100, SEO250, YLD124, PSLD41, or JRD1.
  • the dielectric material with a high electrical refractive index ideally has an optical refractive index in the region of the waveguide cladding, preferably less than 2.8, particularly preferably less than 2.4.
  • the relative dielectric constant ⁇ r is preferably greater than 40, particularly preferably greater than 90 and very particularly preferably greater than 200.
  • the electrical conduction areas are preferably designed as metallic electrodes, for example made of gold or aluminum.
  • the distance between the electrical line areas and the optical waveguide is preferably chosen such that the intensity of the guided optical wave at the line areas is at least a factor of 1000 less than the maximum intensity in the waveguide.
  • Transparent line areas can be realized, for example, using indium tin oxide (abbr.: ITO) or when using a fabrication platform with a silicon waveguide, preferably using lightly doped silicon.
  • ITO indium tin oxide
  • the charge carrier concentration for the transparent line regions is preferably in the range greater than 10 16 cm -3 and less than 10 19 cm -3 , particularly preferably greater than 10 17 cm -3 and less than 10 18 cm -3 . If electro-optical materials are used that require an electrical poling process, this can be simplified using an electrically conductive connection.
  • a DC voltage for polarization can be applied via this connection, so that the polarization voltage is only present across the electro-optical material.
  • the charge carrier concentration of the conductive compound is preferably less than 10 18 cm -3 , particularly preferably less than 10 17 cm -3 .
  • Figure 1-1 shows in subfigure 1A a schematic cross-sectional view of a first embodiment of a device or structure 100A according to the invention and in subfigure 1B a schematic diagram 100B with regard to refractive index and normal component according to sub figure 1A .
  • the waveguide 110 is formed by a waveguide core 120 with a high optical refractive index n opt,120 and a first cladding region 130 that at least partially surrounds the waveguide core 120 and is at least partially electro-optical, with the waveguide core 120 and first jacket region 130 also optionally at least one element and/or at least one material can also be arranged.
  • a second cladding region 140 of dielectric material with high electrical The refractive index n e1.140 is arranged at least partially in the region of the waveguide core 120 between at least two electrically conductive line regions 150 and the first cladding region 130 .
  • Subfigure 1A shows a waveguide component 100A, which comprises at least the following elements: an optical waveguide 110, having at least one material with at least partially electro-optical properties or is formed therefrom; at least one unitary waveguide core 120 comprising or formed from at least one high index of refraction material; at least one first cladding region 130 of the waveguide 110, comprising at least one material with at least partially electro-optical properties or is formed therefrom; at least one second cladding region 140 comprising or formed from at least one dielectric material with high permittivity; at least two electrically conductive line regions 150, which are preferably implemented as metal electrodes or are formed from at least one metal, such metal electrodes having at least one material from the group of materials and this group comprising: iron, aluminum, copper, gold, silver or an alloy of these aforementioned materials.
  • an optical waveguide 110 having at least one material with at least partially electro-optical properties or is formed therefrom
  • at least one unitary waveguide core 120 comprising or formed from at least one high index of refraction
  • Ie Subfigure 1A shows a waveguide component 100A, comprising: a waveguide 110 which is at least partially transparent or translucent to light and is set up in such a way that light can be guided at least partially through the waveguide 110 , comprising: a waveguide core 120, wherein the waveguide core 120 is formed from at least one element or from a plurality of spatially separated elements which have or are formed from at least one waveguide core material; a first cladding region 130 comprising or formed from at least one electro-optical material, the first cladding region 130 at least partially interacting with light guided in the waveguide 110 , and the first cladding region 130 at least partially surrounding the one or more elements Elements of the waveguide core 120 is arranged; and a second cladding region 140 comprising at least one dielectric Material comprises or is formed from, wherein the second cladding region 140 is at least partially arranged around the first cladding region 130 and/or the waveguide core 120 ; at least two line regions 150 that are at least partially electrically conductive, with an
  • the embodiment 100A shown in Subfigure 1A comprises a one-piece waveguide core 120, which is formed by means of at least one strip waveguide with a high optical refractive index.
  • the optical refractive index n opt , 120 of the waveguide core 120 at the operating wavelength is preferably greater than 1.8, more preferably greater than 2.5, and most preferably greater than 3.0.
  • the waveguide core 120 itself need not exhibit any electro-optical activity; Accordingly, a large variety of materials can be used for its production, such as semiconductors such as silicon or compound semiconductors, dielectrics such as metal oxides or nitrides with a high refractive index, or organic materials that have a correspondingly high refractive index.
  • the waveguide core 120 is surrounded at least in regions or partially in the interaction region of a light guided in the waveguide 110 by a first cladding region 130 , which consists at least partially of an electro-optically active material.
  • a second cladding region 140 in the region of the waveguide core 120 between the electro-optical material of the first jacket region 130 and the electrically conductive line regions 150 are arranged.
  • the second cladding region 140 consists of a dielectric material, which does not necessarily have to have electro-optical properties, but can also optionally have such properties.
  • the dielectric material of the second cladding region 140 in the (electrical) frequency range of the applied modulation voltage has a high electrical refractive index n el , 140 that is greater than the electrical refractive index n el , 130 of the first cladding region is decisive for the functionality of the present invention 130.
  • the electrical refractive index n el,140 of the second cladding region 140 is preferably greater than 4.5, more preferably greater than 8, and very particularly preferably greater than 12, while the electrical refractive index n el , 130 of the first cladding region 130 is preferably less than 4.5, particularly preferably less than 3.5, and most preferably less than 2.9.
  • the ratio between the electrical refractive indices n el , 130 and n el , 140 of the first and second cladding regions, 130 and 140 is preferably greater than 2, more preferably greater than 3, and most preferably greater than 4.
  • the electrical refractive index n el , 120 of the waveguide core 120 should be chosen as large as possible.
  • the optical refractive index n opt of the waveguide core material is preferably above 2.1, particularly preferably above 2.8, and very particularly preferably above 3.3.
  • the optical refractive indices n opt must be chosen such that the first cladding region 130 has a smaller optical refractive index n opt , 130 than the optical refractive index n opt , 120 of the material of the waveguide core 120 .
  • the optical refractive index n opt , 140 of the second cladding region 140 can be chosen to be smaller than the optical refractive index n el,120 of the waveguide core 120, but it does not have to be - in the latter case, the thickness of the first cladding region 130 must be chosen so large that radiating from optical power in the second cladding region 140 is reliably avoided.
  • the modulation field strength En, 130 in the electro-optically active first cladding region 130 is significantly or significantly greater than the field strength E n , 140 in the second casing area 140.
  • Subfigure 1B shows the course of the electrical refractive index n el and the course of the electrical modulation field E n in the center of the waveguide cross section of the embodiment 100A in a schematic diagram 100B .
  • the electrical refractive index n el and normal component of the electrical modulation field E n are shown schematically therein along the middle of the cross section of the structure 100A in Subfigure 1A .
  • the line of intersection is drawn as a vertical, dotted line in Subfigure 1A .
  • the differences in the electrical refractive indices, ie n el , 130 ⁇ n el , 140 , in the electro-optical material of the first cladding region 130 and in the dielectric material of the second cladding region 140 lead to an increased electrical modulation field E n due to a discontinuity at the interface in the waveguide core 120.
  • a modulation voltage that is applied across the electrically conductive line regions 150 essentially drops across the first cladding region 130 if the waveguide geometry and the electrical refractive indices n el; 120 , 130 , 140 of the cladding and waveguide core materials can be chosen appropriately.
  • the material of the waveguide core 120 preferably has an electrical refractive index n el , 120 greater than or equal to the electrical refractive index n el , 130 of the first cladding region 130.
  • the electrical modulation field E n concentrates for this embodiment 100A on the first cladding region 130 with a low electrical refractive index n el, 130 , which leads to an increased or increased interaction of the modulation field E n with the light wave in the nonlinear electro-optical cladding material if, according to the invention, a dielectric cladding material is used in the second cladding region 140 whose electrical refractive index n el , 140 is above the electrical refractive index n el , 130 of the electro-optical material in the first cladding region 130 .
  • Examples of materials with a high electrical refractive index n el in the frequency range of up to a few hundred gigahertz are oxides, in particular oxides of transition metals (e.g. ZrO2, HfO 2 , La 2 O 3 , Ta 2 O 3 , Y 2 O 3 , TiO 2 , ...), titanates (e.g. BaTiO3, SrTiO 3 , BaSrTiO 3 , Among, silicates (e.g. HfSiO 4 , ZrSiO 4 , ...), or combinations thereof, ie such materials are suitable for forming of the second cladding region 140.
  • transition metals e.g. ZrO2, HfO 2 , La 2 O 3 , Ta 2 O 3 , Y 2 O 3 , TiO 2 , ...), titanates (e.g. BaTiO3, SrTiO 3 , BaSrTiO 3 , ...), silicates (e.g
  • the second cladding region 140 can have or be formed from at least one of the aforementioned oxides.
  • other dielectric materials can also be used, for example based on organic compounds.
  • materials with electro-optical effects can also be used in the waveguide core 120 , which strengthen or increase the electro-optical interactions originating from the first cladding region 130 .
  • Figure 1-2 1C to 1F shows four schematic cross-sectional views of further embodiments of inventive devices 100C, 100D, 100C and 100F.
  • Subfigure 1C shows another embodiment 100C based on embodiment 100A according to Subfigure 1A and its description with a two-part waveguide core 121, such a two-part waveguide core 121 being formed from at least two elements that are spatially separated from one another in such a way that a slot is formed between these elements is.
  • the slot which is at least partially filled with electro-optical material 130 , both the optical carrier field and the electrical modulation field E n are amplified by discontinuities at dielectric interfaces.
  • the waveguide core 121 comprises or is formed of at least two parts that are spatially separated from each other by a slit (optical slotted waveguide).
  • the slot is at least partially filled with the electro-optical material belonging to the first cladding region 130 , whose optical refractive index n opt , 130 is smaller than that of the two-part waveguide core 121 (slot waveguide).
  • the difference between the optical refractive indices n opt , 121 of the waveguide core 121 and n opt , 130 of the first cladding region 130 is preferably greater than or equal to 0.5, particularly preferably greater than or equal to 1, and very particularly preferably greater than or equal to 1.5.
  • the normal optical component of the electric field strength E n becomes particularly large if a dominant vertically polarized optical field is preferably selected.
  • the field interaction factor ⁇ describes the fraction of the optical field which interacts with the modulation field in the electro-optical cladding material, assuming that the corresponding tensor element of the nonlinear susceptibility is not equal to zero.
  • E x is the x-component of the optical field
  • P is the power of the optical field
  • n opt 130 the refractive index of the electro-optical material
  • Z 0 the characteristic impedance in vacuum
  • a 130 the cross-sectional area in which the optical field with interacts with the modulation field in the electro-optical material.
  • the electrical modulation field E n in the two-part waveguide core 121 directly surrounding the first cladding region 130 can be increased by installing a second cladding region 140 made of dielectric material with a high electrical refractive index n el , 140 in the region of the waveguide core 120 between the electrically conductive line regions 150 and the electro-optical material of the first cladding region 130 is arranged.
  • the combination of optical and electrical field enhancement leads to a particularly strong interaction of the electrical and optical fields in the electro-optical material in the slot.
  • Subfigure 1D shows a further embodiment 100D based on the embodiment 100C according to Subfigure 1C and its description.
  • the second cladding region 140 directly adjoins the waveguide core 122 , with the waveguide core 122 being realized here in this embodiment 100D as a two-part waveguide core.
  • the dielectric material with a high electrical refractive index n el , 140 of the second cladding region 140 connects directly to the two-part waveguide core 122 of an optical slotted waveguide.
  • the optical and electrical field increase at interfaces between regions with a high and low refractive index n el leads to a stronger interaction of the fields with the electro-optical material belonging to the first cladding region 130 in the slot.
  • Subfigure 1E shows a further embodiment with a multi-part waveguide core 123 with electro-optical material as the first cladding area 130, which is connected to electrically conductive line areas 150 via transparent, electrically conductive areas 151 in each case.
  • a material with a high electrical refractive index n el , 140 is arranged as a second cladding region 140 between the waveguide core 123 and the line regions 150 , which leads to an increase in the electrical modulation field E n in the electro-optical material adjoining the waveguide core 123 .
  • optically transparent line regions 151 connect the individual parts of a multi-part waveguide core 123 with electrically conductive line regions 150.
  • the electro-optical material of the first cladding region 130 fills the slot between the parts of the waveguide core 123.
  • the second cladding region 140 made of dielectric material with a high electrical refractive index n el is between the electrically conductive line regions 150 and the first casing region 130 are arranged. Analogously to subfigure 1D , the second cladding region 140 can also connect directly to the waveguide core 123 or be arranged thereon. With moderate conductivity of the transparent line regions 151 , a high field strength for low frequencies of the electrical modulation field E n in the slot is achieved with this structure 100E (low-pass characteristic).
  • these transparent line regions 151 can also be used with low conductivity if a poling process of the electro-optical material is required during fabrication.
  • the poling of electro-optical materials is the alignment of molecules or domains of an electro-optical material such that a macroscopic electro-optical effect develops in the poled volume of material.
  • the molecules of which have a dipole moment can be achieved, among other things, by applying a strong electrical voltage via a DC voltage Field is generated, along whose field lines the molecules align themselves.
  • a DC voltage can be applied via the transparent line regions 151 during the poling process, so that a strong electric field is formed in the slot and thus enables poling.
  • a structure for poling can also be achieved, for example, with components from the embodiments 100C or 100D according to Subfigure 1C or Subfigure 1D .
  • the waveguide core, 121 or 122 has low electrical conductivity, which can be achieved, for example, in silicon by light doping.
  • a portion of the waveguide core 123 is electrically connected to at least one dedicated poling electrode (not shown herein), cf. e.g. poling electrode 153 according to embodiment 300B of Sub figure 3B in Figure 3-1 .
  • a DC voltage can now be applied during fabrication via such a polarization electrode 153 and the low-conductive parts of the waveguide core, so that the electro-optical material in the slot can be polarized.
  • Subfigure 1F shows a further embodiment 100F based on the embodiment according to subfigure 1E and its description, this having a one-piece waveguide core 124 which is connected or electrically conductively connected to an electrically conductive line area 150 with a transparent, electrically conductive area 151 .
  • a transparent line region 151 connects at least part 124 of the waveguide core to an electrically conductive line region 150.
  • the first cladding region 130 consists of electro-optical material.
  • Dielectric material with a high electrical refractive index n el , 140 is placed in the second cladding region 140 between the electro-optical material and the electrically conductive line regions, 150 and 152 , so that the electric modulation field E n in the electro-optical material of the first cladding region 130 at a given or applied modulation voltage is increased.
  • the effect is equivalent to the structure 100E depicted in Subfigure 1E and its description.
  • the line regions 150 and 152 are preferably metal electrodes, with such line regions being formed from at least one of the aforementioned materials or at least partially having such a material.
  • single or multi-part waveguide cores, 120, 121, 122, 123 or 124, in combination with a cladding, 130 and 140, made of partly nonlinear electro-optical, partly linear materials with a high electrical refractive index n el can also be applied to other structures generalize.
  • the greatest possible interaction of the optical field with the electrical modulation field E n is required.
  • This interaction in the electro-optical material is increased by an increase in the optical field and the electrical modulation field E n .
  • the continuity condition for the normal component of the dielectric displacement density D n at dielectric interfaces is used for this purpose.
  • the waveguide core, 120, 121, 122, 123 or 124 can also be formed by periodic or non-periodic structures with structural details that are significantly smaller than the optical wavelength, for example with a waveguide core made up of blocks consists of materials with a high refractive index n el which are arranged unconnected along the direction of propagation of the light (so-called "sub-wavelength grating waveguides").
  • These structures can be designed both as strip waveguides and as slotted waveguides and enable stronger interaction of the optical wave with the electro-optical cladding material.
  • the waveguide core or surrounding areas can be structured along the propagation direction in such a way that the propagation properties of the optical mode are advantageously influenced.
  • These include, for example, so-called “slow-light structures", which reduce the group velocity of the guided light and thus increase the interaction time of the optical field with the electro-optical material. This leads to a high electro-optical interaction over a short distance.
  • “Slow-light structures” can be realized, for example, by photonic crystals. Structures can also be implemented that adapt the group velocity of the optical field to that of the electrical modulation wave.
  • Figures 2-1 and 2-2 show schematic cross-sectional drawing of the concepts for electro-optical modulators according to the invention in a lateral arrangement, analogous to FIGS Figures 1-1 and 1-2 and their description.
  • the sub-figures 2A, 2B, 2C, 2D and 2E correspond in structure and function to their counterparts 1A, 1C, 1D, 1E and 2F in Figure 1-1 and 1-2 with the difference that in this case the structures 200A to 200E are each arranged laterally on an optically transparent substrate 160 .
  • 200A to 200E the at least one waveguide core, 120, 121, 122, 123 or 124, the at least one first cladding region 130, the at least one second cladding region 140 and the at least two electrically conductive line regions 150 are analogous to the embodiments 100A and 100C to 100F of sub-figures 1A and 1C to 1F in FIGS Figures 1-1 and 1-2 and their description arranged sideways or laterally over at least one substrate 160 , with at least one additional cover layer 170 being arranged over such an arrangement and with the substrate 160 being formed from at least one layer.
  • One or more cover layers 170 can thus be applied over the first cladding region 130 .
  • lateral arrangement means an arrangement that is oriented or formed sideways from the center of the body.
  • Figure 2-1 and 2-2 shows such lateral arrangements of structures, analogous to those in Figure 1-1 1 and 1-2 illustrated general component concepts and embodiments as well as their description above.
  • An optically transparent material functions as the substrate and at the same time as the lower waveguide cladding 160 .
  • This can be, for example, at least partially an oxide such as SiO 2 , Al 2 O 3 , . . . or at least partially formed from it or have such an oxide.
  • the waveguide core or its components, ie 120, 121, 122, 123 or 124), the second cladding region 140 made of dielectric material with a high electrical refractive index n el , the transparent line regions 151, and the electrically conductive line regions 150 can first pass through conventional lateral structuring methods are deposited side by side on the substrate before the first cladding region 130 made of at least partially electro-optical material and, if necessary, further cover layers 170 are applied, such a cover layer or such cover layers having at least one material from the group of cover layer materials, with these Group includes, for example: crystalline structures or amorphous structures (e.g.
  • the top layer can be transparent. It offers protection against mechanical damage.
  • the top layer materials are typical electrically isolating whereby a passivation of the component is achieved.
  • the component can be protected from environmental influences such as moisture or oxygen by the cover layer materials.
  • the substrate or the waveguide cladding 160 can at least partially be or have a part of the respective embodiment, 200A to 200E .
  • embodiment 200A in subfigure 2A in Figure 2-1 is a lateral structure over a substrate or waveguide cladding 160 , which is analogous to embodiment 100A in subfigure 1A in Figure 1-1 and their description is formed, arranged.
  • at least one first cladding region 130 is arranged laterally or sideways at least partially around a one-piece waveguide core 120 or surrounds it at least partially and at least one second cladding region 140 at least partially on both sides of the first cladding region 130.
  • this structure is lateral or at least one electrically conductive line region 150 is arranged laterally at least partially on both sides of the second casing region 140 .
  • the first cladding region 130 extends over the lateral structure in such a way that the one-piece waveguide core 120 and the two second cladding regions 140 and the two electrically conductive line regions 150 are at least partially surrounded by the first cladding region 130 , where the first cladding region 130 only partially surrounds the regions of the lateral structure that do not adjoin the substrate or waveguide cladding 160 .
  • the first cladding region 130 forms a first cover layer over the lateral structure, with at least one further or at least one additional cover layer 170 being arranged over this cover layer, with the cover layer 170 also optionally being formed from more than one layer or several may have layers.
  • embodiment 200B in subfigure 2B in Figure 2-1 is analogous to embodiment 100C in subfigure 1C in Figure 1-2 as well as the description thereof, the structure disclosed therein is arranged laterally over a substrate or waveguide cladding 160 .
  • at least one first cladding region 130 is arranged laterally or sideways at least partially around a two-part waveguide core 121 (similar to the above-mentioned embodiment 100C) , or at least one second cladding region 140 surrounds it at least partially and at least partially on both sides of the first cladding region 130 ; in this embodiment 200B , the second cladding region 140 and the two-piece waveguide core 121 are spatially separated from each other.
  • At least one electrically conductive line region 150 is arranged laterally or laterally at least partially on both sides of the second cladding region 140 .
  • the first cladding region 130 extends at least partially within the slot of the two-part waveguide core 121 or between the two elements of the two-part waveguide core 121 and over the lateral structure in such a way that the two-part waveguide core 121 and the two second cladding regions 140 and the two electrically conductive line regions 150 are at least partially surrounded by the first cladding region 130 , the first cladding region 130 only partially enclosing the regions of this lateral structure that do not adjoin the substrate or waveguide cladding 160 .
  • the first cladding region forms a first cap layer over this lateral structure, at least one further or at least one additional cover layer 170 being arranged above this cover layer, it being possible for the cover layer 170 also optionally to be formed from more than one layer or to have a plurality of layers.
  • embodiment 200C in subfigure 2C in Figure 2-2 is analogous to embodiment 100D in subfigure 1D in Figure 1-2 as well as their description, the structure disclosed therein is arranged laterally over a substrate or waveguide cladding 160 .
  • at least one first cladding region 130 is arranged laterally or sideways at least partially around a two-part waveguide core 122 (similar to the above-mentioned embodiment 100D) , or at least one second cladding region 140 surrounds it at least partially and at least partially on both sides of the first cladding region 130 , wherein according to this embodiment 200C the two-piece waveguide core 122 is at least partially directly adjacent to the second cladding region 140 .
  • At least one electrically conductive line region 150 is arranged laterally or laterally at least partially on both sides of the second cladding region 140 .
  • the first cladding region 130 extends at least partially within the slot of the two-part waveguide core 122 or between the two elements of the two-part waveguide core 122 and over the lateral structure in such a way that the two-part waveguide core 122 and the two second cladding regions 140 and the two electrically conductive line regions 150 are at least partially surrounded by the first cladding region 130 , the first cladding region 130 only partially enclosing the regions of the lateral structure that do not adjoin the substrate or waveguide cladding 160 .
  • the first cladding region 130 forms a first cover layer over this lateral structure, with at least one further or at least one additional cover layer 170 being arranged over this cover layer, with the cover layer 170 also optionally being formed from more than one layer or several may have layers.
  • embodiment 200D in subfigure 2D in Figure 2-2 is analogous to embodiment 100E in Subfigure 1E in Figure. 1-2 as well as the description thereof, the structure disclosed therein is arranged or formed laterally over a substrate or waveguide cladding 160 .
  • at least one first cladding region 130 is arranged laterally or sideways at least partially around a two-part waveguide core 123 (similar to the above-mentioned embodiment 100E) , or at least one second cladding region 140 surrounds it at least partially and at least partially on both sides of the first cladding region 130 , wherein in embodiment 200D the second cladding region 140 and the two-part waveguide core 123 are spatially separated from one another.
  • one element of the two-part waveguide core 123 and one of the electrically conductive line regions 150 are electrically conductively connected to each other by means of a transparent electrically conductive line region 151 , with a second cladding region 140 being arranged at least partially over one of the two transparent electrically conductive line regions 151 .
  • at least one electrically conductive line region 150 is arranged laterally or laterally at least partially on both sides of the second cladding region 140 .
  • the first cladding region 130 extends at least partially within the slot of the two-part waveguide core 123 or between the two elements of the two-part waveguide core 123 and over the lateral structure in such a way that the two-part waveguide core 123 and the two second cladding regions 140 and the two electrically conductive line regions 150 are at least partially surrounded by the first cladding region 130 , the first cladding region 130 only partially enclosing the regions of the lateral structure that do not adjoin the substrate or waveguide cladding 160 .
  • the first cladding region 130 forms a first cover layer over this lateral structure, with at least one further or at least one additional cover layer 170 being arranged over this cover layer, with the cover layer 170 also can optionally be formed from more than one layer or have multiple layers.
  • embodiment 200E in subfigure 2E in Figure 2-2 is a lateral structure over a substrate or waveguide cladding 160 , which is analogous to embodiment 100F in subfigure 1F in Figure 1-2 and their description is formed, arranged.
  • at least one first cladding region 130 is arranged at least partially around a one-piece waveguide core 124 laterally or sideways, or at least partially surrounds it.
  • the waveguide core 124 is at least partially arranged or formed over a transparent, electrically conductive region 151 .
  • At least one electrically conductive line area 150 is arranged laterally on both sides of the first casing area 130 , the two line areas 150 being electrically conductively connected to one another by means of the transparent, electrically conductive area 151 .
  • At least one second cladding region 140 is arranged or formed at least partially over the waveguide core 124 and the first cladding region 130 .
  • An additional, electrically conductive line region 152 is at least partially arranged or formed above the second casing region 140
  • Figure 3-1 3A and 3B show two schematic cross-sectional views of further embodiments 300A and 300B of devices according to the invention.
  • Embodiment 300A and 300B are embodiments of capacitively coupled SOH modulators according to the invention.
  • Embodiment 300A has a structure similar to embodiment 200C in Subfigure 2C Figure 2-2 on or is accordingly formed laterally.
  • a lateral structure is arranged therein over a substrate 160, which is set up at least partially over a semiconductor layer 180 in order to ensure mechanical stabilization of the substrate 160 .
  • This lateral structure is formed similar to embodiment 200C and includes at least one at least two-part slot waveguide core 121, at least one first cladding region 130, at least one second cladding region 140 and at least two electrically conductive line regions 150 or is formed therefrom.
  • the intermediate space in the slotted waveguide core 121 is at least partially filled by the first cladding region 130 .
  • a second cladding region 140 is arranged directly adjacent to the slot waveguide core 121 laterally or sideways on both sides. Again, an electrically conductive line area 150 is arranged laterally on both sides of the two second casing areas 140 .
  • the first cladding region 130 which at least partially fills the gap in the slotted waveguide core 121 , also extends at least partially over the lateral structure, formed from at least the slotted waveguide core 121, the two second cladding regions 140 and the two electrically conductive line regions 150.
  • an embodiment 300A comprises a slot waveguide 121 made of silicon, which is at least partially embedded in a first electro-optical cladding material 130 , as well as at least one or more second dielectric cladding regions 140 and electrically conductive line regions 150.
  • the dielectric material of the second cladding region or The second cladding regions 140 directly adjoin the electrically conductive line regions 150 and the slotted waveguide core 121 .
  • the component can be implemented on a standardized SOI platform with a 3 ⁇ m thick buried oxide or substrate 160 and silicon base wafer or semiconductor layer 180 using common or conventional lateral structuring methods, with this structuring method having at least one method from the group of structuring methods, and This group includes: Optical lithography processes such as photolithography and UV lithography, but also electron beam lithography, as well as dry etching processes or wet-chemical etching processes.
  • a cross section through such an embodiment 300A according to the invention of a capacitively coupled SOH phase modulator is shown schematically in Subfigure 3A .
  • the dimensions are merely of an exemplary nature for an exemplary embodiment in accordance with the aforementioned dimensions and are to be adapted accordingly for other or deviating wavelengths or waveguide thicknesses.
  • the optical waveguide core is formed by a slotted waveguide core 121 made of e.g. silicon, the individual strips preferably have a width w rail e.g.
  • w rail is particularly preferably in a range of approximately 150 nm up to about 350 nm;
  • the width of the slot w slot is preferably, for example, in a range from approximately 30 nm to approximately 400 nm, particularly preferably w slot is, for example, in a range from approximately 60 nm to approximately 250 nm.
  • the dielectric material of the second cladding region 140 is deposited with a high electrical refractive index, with a width w dielectric , which is preferably, for example, in a range from approximately 0.2 ⁇ m to approximately 5 ⁇ m, particularly preferably, for example, in a range from approximately 0.5 ⁇ m to is approximately 3 ⁇ m, and a height h dielectric , which is, for example, preferably in a range from 50 nm to approximately 500 nm.
  • a typical material that can be processed well as a thin film is titanium dioxide.
  • Other possibilities include hafnium oxide, barium titanate, or barium strontium titanate.
  • Metal electrodes or electrically conductive line regions 150 adjoin the dielectric material of the second cladding region; designed with a characteristic impedance of 50 ohms.
  • An exemplary embodiment 300B for the capacitively coupled silicon-organic hybrid modulator is the implementation as a phase modulator, based on a silicon-on-insulator (or SOI) slotted waveguide, see subfigure 3B in Figure 3-1 .
  • the modulation section 201 is realized by a capacitively coupled SOH structure.
  • a strip waveguide 190 is connected to a SOH slot waveguide 121 in a strip-to-slot coupler structure 191 .
  • Subfigure 3B shows a schematic cross-sectional view of a phase modulator according to an embodiment 300B based on embodiment 300A.
  • Such SOI strip waveguides 190 are used as access waveguides.
  • strip-to-slot converters 191 the optical field is coupled into a slot waveguide.
  • the dielectric material of the second cladding region 140 with high permittivity laterally adjoins both the waveguide and the metal electrodes or electrically conductive line region 150 .
  • Dedicated poling electrodes 153 make it possible to contact the two parts of the slotted waveguide core 121 directly and to achieve poling of the electro-optical material of the first cladding region 130 with comparatively low DC voltages.
  • Figure 3-2 3 shows in sub-figures 3C and 3D two schematic field diagrams according to the embodiments 300A and 300B in sub-figures 3A and 3B.
  • the reference numbers herein: 121, 130, 140 and 160 in both subfigures 3A and 3B refer below to the areas or their physical properties according to the embodiments 300A and 300B, ie substrate 160, first cladding area 130, second cladding area 140 and slotted waveguide core 121
  • a simulated E x component of the optical field in the slot waveguide core 121 is shown in plot 300C of subfigure 3C , represented by isolines. A significant portion of the field is concentrated in the slot.
  • a simulated E x component of the modulation electric field at 40 GHz is shown, represented by isolines.
  • poling process cf. [5]
  • a DC voltage is applied across the electrodes of the phase modulator.
  • the voltage is applied to dedicated poling electrodes 153.
  • FIG. These poling electrodes 153 are electrically conductively connected to at least part of the slotted waveguide core 121 close to the strip-to-slot converter 191 , without interacting with the optical or electrical field, cf. Subfigure 3B in Figure 3-1 .
  • the poling field does not have to be applied over the dielectric material of the second cladding region 140 and the necessary poling voltage can be significantly reduced.
  • the distance d can be significantly reduced when using the poling electrodes 153 and the weakly conductive slotted waveguide 121 , so that, for example, instead of a few 100 V, only a few 10 V poling voltage are necessary .
  • the waveguide core 121 made of silicon is slightly electrically conductive, with a very low level of doping, which does not lead to any significant optical losses.
  • the slot waveguide core 121 can be poled via the metal electrodes or electrically conductive line regions 150 that are further away and a correspondingly increased voltage. Since this voltage is required once during manufacture for the polarity, this has no effect on the efficiency of the component.
  • Figure 4-1 4A to 4C shows three schematic cross-sectional views of further embodiments of devices according to the invention or further exemplary embodiments 400A or 400B and 400C of a capacitively coupled SOH modulator on the SOI platform.
  • Subfigure 4A shows a cross section of an embodiment 400A, which is based, for example, on the previously described embodiment 200A from Subfigure 2A in Figure 2-2 is based, this arrangement according to 200A being arranged on a silicon base wafer or semiconductor layer 180 for stabilization.
  • the embodiment 400A and 400B of a capacitively coupled SOH modulator is based on a strip waveguide core.
  • Subfigure 4B shows a plan view of the cross section of the embodiment 400A in Subfigure 4A, according to the cutting direction AA in Subfigure 4A, of a phase modulator with strip waveguide and capacitively coupled electrodes with strip waveguide core 120.
  • a narrow strip waveguide 120 is used, see subfigures 4A and 4B.
  • Strip waveguide core 120 which is at least partially made of silicon, is used as a waveguide core.
  • the electro-optical material of the first cladding region 130 that at least partially surrounds it forms a waveguide cladding.
  • the dielectric material of the second cladding region 140 with high permittivity in a previously defined distance 400-6, also referred to herein as w gap , to the waveguide core concentrates the electrical modulation field, which is impressed by the metal electrodes or the electrically conductive line regions 150 , in the vicinity of the waveguide core 120, without the optical wave being too disturb. This means that the metal electrodes are far enough away from the waveguide so that the lightwave, which is guided in the waveguide, does not significantly interact with the conductive metal electrodes, which would lead to an attenuation of the lightwave.
  • the width 400-5 (also referred to as w strip here) is preferably in a range from approximately 100 nm to approximately 500 nm, for example w strip or 400-5 is particularly preferably in a range from approximately 200 nm to to approximately 350 nm.
  • the optical field has a large overlap with the electro-optical cladding material of the first cladding region 130.
  • the overlap is preferably greater than 10%, particularly preferably greater than 20% and very particularly preferably greater than 40%.
  • the dielectric material with a high electrical refractive index of the second cladding region 140 which comprises at least one from the group of materials or is at least partially formed therefrom, the group comprising, for example: barium titanate, barium strontium titanate or titanium dioxide; begins at a defined distance 400-6 from the waveguide core, so that the electro-optical material of the first cladding region 130 forms the waveguide cladding and the electric and optical field is concentrated in this region.
  • the distance w gap or 400-6 between the waveguide core 120 and the dielectric material of the second cladding region 140 is, for example, preferably in a range from approximately 50 nm to approximately 1000 nm, particularly preferably in a range from approximately 100 nm to approximately 500 nm.
  • the metal electrodes or electrically conductive line regions 150 are placed, for example, at a distance of preferably w gap + W dielectricum >1 ⁇ m from the waveguide core.
  • Subfigure 4C shows a plan view of a further embodiment 400C of a capacitively coupled SOH modulator with a so-called sub-wavelength grating waveguide 125 , ie in other words, the slotted waveguide core 125 is implemented as a sub-wavelength grating waveguide.
  • the waveguide core can, for example, also be in the form of a sub-wavelength grating (abbreviation: SWG) waveguide 125 , see Subfigure 4C for a top view.
  • the waveguide core consists of regularly arranged individual elements with spacing and dimensions that are well below the wavelength of the optical light in the selected materials. With a wavelength of the optical light of 1550 nm, periodic or quasi-periodic structures with periods of less than 300 nm are preferably used.
  • Figure 4-2 4D to 4F shows three schematic cross-sectional views of further embodiments of devices according to the invention or further exemplary embodiments 400D or 400E and 400F, these being arranged on a silicon base wafer or semiconductor layer 180 for stabilization.
  • Subfigure 4E shows a plan view of a cross section of embodiment 400D along section direction BB in Subfigure 4D.
  • Subfigure 4D and 4E represent an embodiment of a capacitively coupled SOH modulator with slotted waveguide 123, which is at least partially formed of silicon, which is coupled or connected to electrodes 150 with thin, transparent conductive areas 151 . At low frequencies the applied voltage drops completely across the slot filled with electro-optic material 130 .
  • a capacitively coupled SOH modulator comprises a slotted waveguide 123, similar to or based on the embodiment 300A in Subfigure 3A in Figure 3-1 shown.
  • the waveguide core 123 is electrically conductively connected directly to the electrodes 150 with a thin, transparent, conductive area 151 made of silicon, see subfigures 4D and 4E.
  • the thickness 400-4 or h slab of the electrically conductive region 151 is, for example, preferably in a range from approximately 10 nm to to approximately 200 nm, particularly preferably in a range from approximately 20 nm to approximately 80 nm. Due to this resistive coupling, the applied voltage drops completely across the slot at low frequencies, which is at least partially filled with electro-optical material of the first cladding region 130 is. At higher frequencies, the capacitive coupling through the dielectric material of the second cladding region 140, which is deposited between the waveguide core 123 and electrodes or the electrically conductive line regions 150 on the transparent, electrically conductive region 151 , dominates.
  • the applied voltage drops mainly across the slot due to the resistive coupling even at low frequencies, the increase in the electric field can be maintained over the entire frequency range up to the DC voltage, even if the electro-optical material of the first cladding region 130 is in the slot of the waveguide core 123 has low electrical conductivity.
  • an efficient polarization of the electro-optical material of the first cladding region 130 located in the slot of the slotted waveguide 123 can be achieved with small applied voltages.
  • the slot in the slot waveguide 123 has a previously determined width 400-8 or w slot , which is, for example, preferably in a range from approximately 50 nm to approximately 300 nm, or, for example, particularly preferably in a range of approximately 80 nm up to about 200 nm.
  • the slotted waveguide 123 has a previously determined width 400-9 or w rail , which is, for example, preferably in a range from approximately 80 nm to approximately 400 nm, or, for example, particularly preferably in a range from approximately 140 to about 280 lies.
  • Subfigure 4F shows a plan view of an embodiment 400F of a capacitively coupled SOH modulator with a sub-wavelength grating waveguide 126 designed as a slotted waveguide.
  • the slotted waveguide 126 according to subfigure 3A Figure 3-1 can also be designed as a "sub-wavelength grating" structure, see subfigure 4F for a plan view.
  • the slotted SWG waveguide core 126 allows a light guided therein to interact strongly with the electro-optical material of the first cladding region 130.
  • the slot in the slotted waveguide 126 has a predetermined width of 400-8 or w slot , which is preferred, for example, in is in a range from approximately 50 nm to approximately 300 nm, or, for example, is particularly preferably in a range from approximately 80 nm to approximately 200 nm.
  • the slotted waveguide 126 has a previously determined width 400-9 or w rail , which is preferably in a range from approximately 80 nm to approximately 400 nm, or, for example, particularly preferably in a range of approximately 140 nm up to about 280 nm.

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Claims (26)

  1. Composant guide d'ondes (100A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F), comprenant :
    1.1 un guide d'ondes (110) qui est au moins partiellement transparent ou translucide à la lumière et installé de façon que la lumière puisse être conduite au moins partiellement à travers le guide d'ondes, comprenant :
    1.1.1. un noyau de guide d'ondes (120, 121, 122, 123, 124), ce noyau de guide d'ondes (120, 121, 122, 123, 124) étant en un élément ou plusieurs éléments séparés les uns des autres dans l'espace et qui ont au moins un matériau de noyau de guide d'ondes ou sont réalisés avec celui-ci;
    1.1.2. une première zone enveloppe (130) ayant au moins une matière électro-optique ou étant réalisée avec celle-ci, cette première zone enveloppe (130) coopérant au moins en partie avec la lumière guidée dans le guide d'ondes (110) et la première zone enveloppe (130) entourant au moins en partie l'élément ou plusieurs éléments du noyau de guide d'ondes (120, 121, 122, 123, 124) ; et
    1.1.3. une seconde zone-enveloppe (140) ayant au moins une matière diélectrique ou étant réalisée avec celle-ci, la seconde zone-enveloppe (140) entourant au moins partiellement la première zone-enveloppe (130) et/ou le noyau de guide d'ondes (120, 121, 122, 123, 124);
    1.2 au moins deux zones de guidage (150, 152) qui sont au moins partiellement électro-conductrices,
    1.2.1. on applique un signal de modulation électrique entre les zones conductrices (150, 152),
    1.2.2 les zones conductrices (150, 152) étant prévues au moins en partie le long du guide d'ondes optique (110) pour que les zones conductrices (150, 152) puissent être face à face et que le guide d'ondes (110) se trouve au moins en partie entre les zones conductrices ;
    1.2.3 dans lequel
    le signal de modulation forme un champ électrique dont les lignes de champ traversent au moins en partie à la fois la seconde zone-enveloppe (140) et la première zone-enveloppe (130),
    caractérisé en ce que
    1.2.4 la matière diélectrique de la seconde zone enveloppe (140) présente un indice de réfraction électrique plus élevé dans la plage de fréquences du signal de modulation que la matière électro-optique de la première zone enveloppe (130).
  2. Composant guide d'ondes (100A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F), selon la revendication 1,
    caractérisé en ce que
    l'indice de réfraction électrique de la matière diélectrique dans la seconde plage enveloppe (140) pour une fréquence du signal de modulation de 10 GHz, dépasse de plus d'un coefficient 1, 8 l'indice de réfraction électrique de la matière électro-optique de la première plage enveloppe (130).
  3. Composant guide d'ondes (100A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F), selon la revendication 1,
    caractérisé en ce que
    la matière diélectrique de la seconde zone enveloppe (140) a un second indice de réfraction électrique d'au moins 3,5 ; 4,5 ; 8 ; 10 ; 15 ; 20 ou 25 dans une plage de fréquences d'un signal de modulation comprises entre 5 GHz et 40 GHz.
  4. Composant guide d'ondes (100A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F), selon l'une des revendications précédentes,
    caractérisé en ce que
    l'indice de réfraction électrique du noyau de guide d'ondes (120, 121, 122, 123, 124) est supérieur à l'indice de réfraction électrique de la première zone enveloppe (130).
  5. Composant guide d'ondes (100-A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F) selon l'une des revendications précédentes,
    caractérisé en ce que
    l'indice de réfraction électrique du noyau de guide d'ondes (120, 121, 122, 123, 124) est au moins égal à 3.
  6. Composant guide d'ondes (100-A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F) selon l'une des revendications précédentes,
    caractérisé en ce que
    l'indice de réfraction électrique de la matière électro-optique de la première zone enveloppe (130) est au plus égal à 9.
  7. Composant guide d'ondes (100-A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F) selon l'une des revendications précédentes,
    caractérisé en ce que
    le composant guide d'ondes (100-A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F) a une structure latérale dont tout d'abord le noyau de guide d'ondes (120, 121, 122, 123, 124), les zones conductrices (150, 152) et au moins la matière diélectrique de la seconde zone enveloppe (140) sont dans une disposition planaire sur laquelle on applique une matière électro-optique active.
  8. Composant guide d'ondes (100-A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F) selon l'une des revendications précédentes,
    caractérisé en ce que
    le noyau de guide d'ondes (120, 121, 122, 123, 124), la première zone enveloppe (130), la seconde zone enveloppe (140) et les zones de conduction (150, 151) sont au moins en partie juxtaposées sur un substrat commun (160).
  9. Composant guide d'ondes (100-A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F) selon l'une des revendications précédentes,
    caractérisé en ce que
    le noyau de guide d'ondes (120, 121, 122, 123, 124) a au moins en partie des propriétés électro-acoustiques.
  10. Composant guide d'ondes (100-A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F) selon l'une des revendications précédentes,
    caractérisé en ce que
    le noyau de guide d'ondes (120) est réalisé sous la forme d'un guide d'ondes à fentes (121, 122, 123).
  11. Composant guide d'ondes (100-A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F) selon la revendication 10,
    caractérisé en ce que
    la différence entre l'indice de réfraction optique du noyau de guide d'ondes et la première zone enveloppe du guide d'ondes à fentes (121, 122, 123) est supérieure à 0,5 ou supérieure à 1,0 ou supérieure à 1,5.
  12. Composant guide d'ondes (100-A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F) selon l'une des revendications précédentes,
    caractérisé en ce que
    la seconde zone enveloppe (140) est au moins en partie directement adjacente aux zones de conduction électro-conductrices (150).
  13. Composant guide d'ondes (100-A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F) selon l'une quelconque des revendications précédentes,
    caractérisé en ce que
    la seconde zone enveloppe (140) est au moins en partie directement adjacente à la première zone enveloppe (130).
  14. Composant guide d'ondes (100-A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F) selon l'une des revendications précédentes,
    caractérisé en ce que
    la seconde zone enveloppe (140) est au moins en partie directement adjacente au noyau de guide d'ondes (120, 121, 122, 123, 124).
  15. Composant guide d'ondes (100-A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F) selon l'une des revendications précédentes,
    caractérisé en ce que
    le noyau de guide d'ondes (120, 121, 122, 123, 124) est relié au moins partiellement par la zone de conduction (151) à la zone de conduction (150) par une liaison électro-conductrice.
  16. Composant guide d'ondes (100-A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F) selon l'une des revendications précédentes,
    caractérisé en ce que
    le composant de guide d'ondes (100-A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F) comprend en plus au moins une zone de conduction électro-conductrice (153) ou un contact relié au moins en partie au noyau de guide d'ondes (120, 121, 122, 123, 124) par une liaison électro-conductrice.
  17. Composant guide d'ondes (100-A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F) selon l'une des revendications précédentes,
    caractérisé en ce que
    la concentration dans le support de charges libre au moins dans le noyau de guide d'ondes (120, 121, 122, 123, 124) est inférieure à 1019 cm-3 ou inférieure à 018 cm-3 ou inférieure à 1017 cm-3.
  18. Composant guide d'ondes (100-A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F) selon l'une des revendications précédentes,
    caractérisé en ce que
    la matière diélectrique dans la seconde zone enveloppe (140) est transparente ou translucide à la lumière et elle est installée de façon que la lumière soit guidée au moins en partie à travers la seconde zone enveloppe (140).
  19. Composant guide d'ondes (100-A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F) selon l'une des revendications précédentes,
    caractérisé en ce que
    la matière diélectrique de la seconde zone enveloppe (140) comporte au moins en partie une matière organique ou est réalisée avec celle-ci.
  20. Composant guide d'ondes (100-A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F) selon l'une des revendications précédentes,
    caractérisé en ce que
    la seconde zone enveloppe (140) comprend au moins une matière du groupe des matières diélectriques ou est réalisée avec celles-ci, ce groupe des matières diélectriques comprenant : Al2O3, ZrO2, ZrSiO4, HfO2, HfSiO4, Pr2O3, Gd2O3, Y2O3, La2O3, Ta2O5, TiO2, BaTiO3, SrTiO3, BaSrTiO3 ou des combinaisons de celles-ci.
  21. Composant guide d'ondes (100-A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F) selon l'une des revendications précédentes,
    caractérisé en ce que
    le guide d'ondes (110) comporte au moins en partie du silicium ou est réalisé avec celui-ci.
  22. Composant guide d'ondes (100-A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F) selon l'une des revendications précédentes,
    caractérisé en ce que
    le composant de guide d'ondes (100-A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F) comporte au moins un substrat (160) qui comporte au moins en partie SiO2 ou est réalisé avec SiO2.
  23. Composant guide d'ondes (100-A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F) selon l'une des revendications précédentes,
    caractérisé en ce que
    la matière électro-optique de la première zone enveloppe (130) comporte au moins en partie une matière organique ou est réalisée avec celle-ci.
  24. Composant guide d'ondes (100-A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F) selon l'une des revendications précédentes,
    caractérisé en ce que
    la matière électro-optique de la première zone enveloppe (130) comporte au moins en partie une matière ferroélectrique ou est réalisée avec celle-ci.
  25. Composant guide d'ondes (100-A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F) selon l'une des revendications précédentes,
    caractérisé en ce que
    le noyau de guide d'ondes (120, 121, 122, 123, 124) comporte des éléments de dimensions maximales inférieures à la longueur d'onde de la matière ou inférieures à la demi-longueur d'onde de la matière du noyau de guide d'ondes.
  26. Composant guide d'ondes (100-A-F, 200A-E, 300A-B, 400A-F) selon l'une des revendications précédentes,
    caractérisé en ce que
    le guide d'ondes (110) est formé au moins en partie avec des cristaux photoniques ou comporte de tels cristaux.
EP18799433.0A 2017-11-02 2018-10-24 Composant de guide d'onde Active EP3704536B1 (fr)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
DE102017125581.8A DE102017125581A1 (de) 2017-11-02 2017-11-02 Wellenleiter-Bauelement
PCT/EP2018/000486 WO2019086138A1 (fr) 2017-11-02 2018-10-24 Composant de guide d'onde

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
EP3704536A1 EP3704536A1 (fr) 2020-09-09
EP3704536B1 true EP3704536B1 (fr) 2022-09-21

Family

ID=64172438

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
EP18799433.0A Active EP3704536B1 (fr) 2017-11-02 2018-10-24 Composant de guide d'onde

Country Status (4)

Country Link
US (1) US11543688B2 (fr)
EP (1) EP3704536B1 (fr)
DE (1) DE102017125581A1 (fr)
WO (1) WO2019086138A1 (fr)

Families Citing this family (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE102017125581A1 (de) * 2017-11-02 2019-05-02 Karlsruher Institut für Technologie Wellenleiter-Bauelement
WO2020044516A1 (fr) * 2018-08-30 2020-03-05 株式会社アドバンテスト Élément optique
WO2023228248A1 (fr) * 2022-05-23 2023-11-30 株式会社アドバンテスト Élément optique

Family Cites Families (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6687425B2 (en) * 2001-07-26 2004-02-03 Battelle Memorial Institute Waveguides and devices incorporating optically functional cladding regions
US6711308B2 (en) * 2001-12-26 2004-03-23 Lucent Technologies Inc. Electro-optical modulators
DE102006045102B4 (de) 2006-09-21 2011-06-01 Karlsruher Institut für Technologie Elektro-optisches Hochindexkontrast-Wellenleiter-Bauelement
US8340486B1 (en) * 2009-06-09 2012-12-25 University Of Washington Effective χ2 on the basis of electric biasing of χ3 materials
JP5233911B2 (ja) 2009-08-26 2013-07-10 株式会社リコー 電気光学素子
US20120321240A1 (en) * 2011-04-29 2012-12-20 Luca Alloatti Electro-optical device and method for processing an optical signal
US9470952B2 (en) 2013-06-13 2016-10-18 The Regents Of The University Of California Sub-volt drive 100 GHz bandwidth electro-optic modulator
US20160313579A1 (en) 2013-12-11 2016-10-27 Sumitomo Osaka Cement Co., Ltd. Electro-optic element
DE102017125581A1 (de) * 2017-11-02 2019-05-02 Karlsruher Institut für Technologie Wellenleiter-Bauelement

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US20210208429A1 (en) 2021-07-08
US11543688B2 (en) 2023-01-03
WO2019086138A1 (fr) 2019-05-09
EP3704536A1 (fr) 2020-09-09
DE102017125581A1 (de) 2019-05-02

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